Sunday, December 16

Inspired by the book and video by Tartine Bakery,
Jason's love for bread baking has been re-ignited! He lovingly feeds
his mother/starter every morning created by natural yeast in the air and
flour from the fields surrounding our farmhouse. He takes notes on
everything, the bubbles in the starter, the smell, the airy pockets in
the dough, the time each step is started/completed. The Tartine Bread
Book is not just about simply baking bread but becoming a bread baker.
Join us as we chronicle the steps of baking bread in a cold stone
farmhouse in Italy!

Crust and color looks good but still pancake like and heavy in hand, not light. There's no rise in the oven.

Again here, notice the right side droops down. The dough rises near
the kitchen fireplace, the warmest place in the house - but you can see
the final product is still a bit flat.

Some air pockets
have formed around the crust but the middle still looks
too dense and compact. There are three possible causes for the dense
crumb: 1. Keeping a constant temperature in my cold kitchen during the
bulk fermentation or the first
rise. 2. The starter isn't ripe enough when I mix it for the leaven.
(Again - cold temps) or 3. I'm not shaping it right which is why I'm not
getting it to spring up when it bakes.

Any bread bakers out there with experience in high hydration doughs let me know! I'll keep trying in the meantime....